seem conducive
Frequency: 6.05.1 per million words
Used to suggest that a situation or condition appears to be helpful or favorable.
Categories:
Examples (10)
- The quiet atmosphere of the new library seems conducive to focused study.
- The constant interruptions hardly seem conducive to productive work.
- This collaborative environment seems particularly conducive to innovation.
- His relaxed teaching style didn't seem conducive to discipline at first, but the students responded well.
- Does this open-plan office really seem conducive to concentration?
- The current economic climate doesn't seem conducive to starting a new business.
- A four-day work week seems conducive to better employee morale and work-life balance.
- The dim lighting and soft music seem conducive to a relaxed dining experience.
- The new government policies seem conducive to foreign investment.
- While it might be noisy, the energetic setting seems conducive to creative brainstorming.